Nellie Bowles has published a book!

MONDAY, MAY 20, 2024

On balance, we disagree with Michelle Goldberg's reactions: Who the heck is Nellie Bowles? The foremost authority thumbnails:

Nellie Bowles 

Nellie Bowles is an American journalist. She is noted for covering the technology world of Silicon Valley. She has written for the English-language Argentine daily the Buenos Aires Herald, the San Francisco Chronicle, The California Sunday Magazine, the technology journalism website Recode, the British daily The Guardian beginning in 2016, then for Vice News, The New York Times and most recently The Free Press.

[...]

In 2021, Bowles along with Bari Weiss launched Common Sense on Substack. The publication changed names to The Free Press in 2022. The Free Press is now the top earning Substack with more than 630,000 total subscribers. Bowles is the company's head of strategy and writes a weekly column called TGIF.

Her story “The Sperm Kings Have a Problem: Too Much Demand” was turned into a feature-length documentary, produced by The New York Times and FX and came out in March 2024.

Her first book, entitled Morning After the Revolution, was released in May 2024 by Thesis, a new imprint of Penguin Random House.

Last Friday, Bowles appeared on Real Time with Bill Maher in connection with the publication of her book. To watch the Overtime segment, you can just click here.

We haven't read Bowles' book. The New York Times columnist Michelle Goldberg has. 

Goldberg offers an assessment of Bowles' book in her new column for the Times. We'll offer our reactions to Goldberg's reactions, not to the Bowles book itself.

Goldberg starts by offering an overview of Bowles' book. Along the way, she offers an assessment we're inclined to credit, then becomes more negative.

Headline included, Goldberg's column starts like this:

Wokeness Is Dying. We Might Miss It.

In her new book, “Morning After the Revolution: Dispatches From the Wrong Side of History,” Nellie Bowles, a former New York Times journalist grown disillusioned with both the mainstream media and the left, writes about the year 2020, when the combustible confluence of the pandemic, the murder of George Floyd and the prospect of Donald Trump’s re-election made politics and culture go “berserk.” She describes a liberal intelligentsia “wild with rage and optimism,” brimming with “fresh ideas from academia that began to reshape every part of society.” Her name for this phenomenon, often derided as “wokeness,” is the “New Progressivism,” and her book attempts, with varying degrees of success, to skewer it.

There is much about that febrile moment worth satirizing, including the white-lady struggle sessions inspired by the risible Robin DiAngelo and the inevitable implosion of Seattle’s anarchist Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone. Bowles dissects both in the book’s best sections. She seems to be inspired by the great works of 1960s and 1970s New Journalism about the absurdities of the counterculture, most famously Tom Wolfe’s “Radical Chic” and Joan Didion’s “Slouching Towards Bethlehem.” But “Morning After the Revolution” is undermined by Bowles’s lazy mockery and insupportable generalizations.

“At various points, my fellow reporters at major news organizations told me roads and birds are racist,” she writes. “Voting is racist. Exercise is super racist.” Even allowing for 2020’s great flood of social-justice click bait, these are misleading and reductive caricatures. It’s hardly revisionist history, for example, to point out that Interstates were tools of racial segregation.

Is Bowles' book really clogged with "lazy mockery and insupportable generalizations?" Not having read the book, we have no idea.

Our reaction is mixed with respect to the examples Goldberg provides. For example, is it true that "Interstates were tools of racial segregation?" 

As far as we know, yes, it is true—and this general situation has been widely noted.

On the other hand, did reporters at major news organization also "tell us that birds are racist?" Probably not, but we did question the journalistic judgment involved when major orgs—from the New York Times on down—offered front-page reports about the movement to rename various species of birds due to the racism of the ornithologists and naturalists whose names they currently bear.

That struck us as possibly a bit performative on the part of the news orgs in question. More on that general perception below.

We've raced right by the early comment by Goldberg (not by Bowles) with which we're inclined to agree. That's the comment in which she refers to "the risible Robin DiAngelo" and (with apologies) to "her white-lady struggle sessions" (Goldberg's term).

For ourselves, we'd skip that second mocking formulation. But we have found DiAngelo's antiracism ministry to be largely "risible" and presumably counterproductive. For that reason, we were glad to see Goldberg come out and use that short, non-gendered term.

That helps explain why we're inclined to disagree with where Goldberg seems to come out with respect to Bowles' book. 

As noted, Goldberg starts by saying that there's a lot that's worth satirizing in Blue America's reactions to the murder of George Floyd in May 2020. On balance, though, Goldberg thinks that Bowles overdoes it—and she ends up saying this:

There are aspects of the New Progressivism—its clunky neologisms and disdain for free speech—that I’ll be glad to see go. But however overwrought the politics of 2020 were, they also represented a rare moment when there was suddenly enormous societal energy to tackle long-festering inequalities. That energy has largely dissipated, right when we need it most, heading into another election with Trump on the ballot.

[...]

Even if it could be sanctimonious and grating, I fear we’ll come to miss the progressive urgency that marked the Trump presidency. Bowles writes as if the uprisings of 2020 were sparked by anomie rather than real crises. She describes them with an analogy to allergy science: “When the area around a child is very well disinfected, her immune system will keep searching for a fight.”

In thinking about that period, I also tend to reach for health metaphors, but different ones. America reacted to Trump as if he were a novel pathogen and became inflamed. Now our immune system is exhausted, and the virus is returning stronger than ever.

On balance, we're inclined to disagree about "the New Progressivism." Here's why:

It seems to us that so much of the journalistic reaction was so blatantly performative—was so transparently faux; was so poorly executed on a journalistic basis—as perhaps to do more harm than good. 

One part of America "reacted to Trump"—but another large part of America largely reacted to us! All too often, their reactions may have made more sense than our outbursts of activism did.

The transparent phoniness of much that occurred may have done as much harm as good. Within the journalistic realm, much of the work in question struck us as transparently fake, and the technical journalistic incompetence routinely ran down like the waters of a mighty mountain stream.

A lot of what we progressives said and did is very hard to defend. Someday, we'll force ourselves to tell you about Al Sharpton's speech—and we have long admired Al Sharpton—and you'll perhaps have a better idea of what we mean.

Trump may be on the comeback road. How much of that tracks back to us?

58 comments:

  1. In the wake of the rising wokeness movement, Trump was resoundingly defeated.

    Sure, this angers right wingers like Bowles and Somerby, and they express their anger regularly, and frankly, immaturely.

    Ok, Somerby is mad about wokeness. So what. At least he has a blog where he can rant his nonsense.

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  2. "...but another large part of America largely reacted to us!"

    Wow, an amazing display of self-awareness, for a liberal.
    My compliments.

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  3. It's a general Somerby theme that smug displays of performative wokeness are unwise because they provoke an electoral backlash. Brave Liberals here misapprehend this theme as a covert promotion of right-wing talking points.

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    1. In part because Somerby does not offer any credible evidence to back up his ridiculous claim, and worse, the evidence suggests just the opposite, that wokeness is genuine and is a major motivating factor for Dem voters.

      Somerby’s cynicism about Dems is unjustified and likely borne from his right wing perspective.

      It’s never good when someone suffers such as Somerby does, but it’s of his own making, since his claims are nonsense. He draws criticism here because of his nonsense, but he also has a cadre of right wing supporters here too; he may find emotional comfort from his fans, but they only enable his worst traits.

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    2. Somerby and Pied Piper are just following the mainstream media's "Only Democrats have agency" adage.
      Blaming people who vote for Trump for voting for Trump is uncouth in their eyes.

      Delete
    3. I, for one, think Republicans have agency. For example, I think those who stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6 should be held accountable. And I think Trump should be held accountable for his habitual criming.

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    4. 6:37,
      Let's hope that your woke attitude doesn't lead to backlash.

      Delete
  4. BTW, I'm willing to make my prediction about the jury's verdict in the Trump trial. I predict the jury will convict on misdemeanors, but hang on felonies, and that the prosecution will not retry the felonies.

    We'll see how close I get it.

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    Replies
    1. To convict on misdemeanors, they need to have that option. Apparently Mr Trump's legal team can ask for that option to be made available, but I don't think they have at this point. There's no misdemeanor charges.

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    2. Pied Piper:

      The statute of limitations has run all of these misdemeanors for false business records.

      And since no one can identify the alleged crime that Trump was trying to commit by falsifying these records, a honest judge would have dismissed these charges when they were first brought.

      Hopefully, the jurors will have more integrity than Judge Merchan.

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    3. It's my understanding that the prosecutors can also ask for these misdemeanors to presented to the jury.

      https://nypost.com/2024/05/19/us-news/trumps-legal-team-can-ask-hush-money-trial-jury-to-consider-misdemeanor-charges/

      If I'm mistaken, I'd appreciate the correction.

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    4. Why would he do that if he believes the felonies were committed (and has now presented a lot of evidence to support that belief)? This is a matter of prosecutorial judgment. What extenuating circumstances exist that would cause him to seek the lesser charges when he has, by most accounts of legal experts, a "slam dunk" case against Trump?

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    5. As has been stated repeatedly, the crime consisted of major campaign violations. These were investigated immediately upon the conclusion of the 2016 election but the main evidence against Trump became available when Michael Cohen agreed to cooperate, after pleading guilty to his own crimes.

      Ask yourself how what Cohen did can be a crime for which he spent time in jail, without Trump's actions also being a crime? It would be grossly unfair to Cohen if Trump were let slide on this, not to mention the others who were harmed by Trump's scheme.

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    6. What were the campaign violations? With that last detail, I think we'll be able to say very simply why Trump is being tried for felonies.

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  5. I don’t know if birds are racist, but it wouldn’t surprise me.

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    Replies
    1. That's the meaning of the phrase, "Birds of a feather flock together." Segregation now; segregation forever!

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  6. "Democrat" is included in the upcoming DSM 6.

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    Replies
    1. "Cultist" has been there all along.

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    2. Wouldn't you say that willingly drinking poisoned Kool-Aid is abnormal behavior.

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  7. it's not true that interstates were tools of segregation. Where?

    You hear this a lot in LA circles, but if you know anything about LA history and neighborhoods you'll also know that the Southern California freeway system actually had a much more major negative impact on anglo areas and not minority -- of which there were few in the 50s. Just look at the map.

    It's also not true about the Bronx. White Jewish neighborhoods were much more impacted than Black.

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    Replies
    1. I wish David would look into that. It might be real evidence of antisemitism.

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    2. When I was young, the Whitestone Bridge was the only way to go from the Bronx to Long Island. When the Throg's Neck Bridge was built, some Bronx dignitary complained, "Nobody wants to visit he Bronx. They just want to drive through it."

      Frankly I never before heard that highways or bridges could be racist or antisemitic. To me, it sounds silly. People of all races and religions benefit by using those roads. When two black and one Jewish civil rights workers were murdered in Mississippi, that was racism and perhaps antisemitism.

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    3. Oh yeah, calling freeways "racist" is a big new grievance issue now. And it's a real canard.

      The LA Times did a famous article a few years ago where they studied this nationwide targeting for the last 30 years, and which may have occurred in some places. But the LA and Bronx systems were planned SEVENTY years ago when these affected neighborhoods were primarily white. The LA freeways had a huge effect on white neighborhoods at the time, a reality which gets completely ignored now.

      Also, what should the planners have done instead? Save ethnic areas and make everyone drive surface streets instead? And do freeways really "destroy" neighborhoods to begin with?

      They aren't that big!

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    4. Obviously "tools of segregation" is woke bullshit, no different than algebra being a "tool of segregation".

      Nevertheless, sometimes highways do separate rich neighborhoods from poor ones. Have you been to East Palo Alto? But of course that wasn't the purpose of any highway. Rather a side effect.

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    5. Oh of course. And there probably were cases of deliberate targeting, although I suspect that the real motive was economic renewal rather than racist hate.

      But where was 280 supposed to go instead? How could the 5 avoid Boyle Heights? How could the Cross-Bronx Expressway avoid those Bronx neighborhoods?

      What was the better solution? Not build those freeways at all? Keep using surface streets?

      The righteous revisionists now despise those questions because they go to the heart of their (mostly) phony narrative about the "racist" history of highways. But in LA at least, it was the white neighborhoods that bore the brunt of the construction. Not minority. Same with the Bronx.

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    6. Yes, freeways do destroy neighborhoods, yes they’re that big. I don’t know if they were racially motivated. I remember freeways, which we called expressways, destroying white neighborhoods in Chicago in the 1950s.

      Accusations of racism, like other accusations, should be received with skeptical but open minds.

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    7. The interstate highways could have been kept out of cities entirely. I don’t think that option was even considered.

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    8. Minority neighborhoods are more likely to be located near freeways because housing costs less there. Residents receive larger doses of lead from auto exhausts. You can see it in maps that superimpose lead levels and demographics on neighborhoods.

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    9. Read "The Power Broker: Robert Moses and the Fall of New York". Biography of Robert Moses by Robert Caro. It is not a new charge being made.

      The Power Broker: Robert Moses and the
      Fall of New York (1974). This Pulitzer Prize non-fiction novel chronicles the story
      of Robert Moses, whom some argue was the single most powerful man in New
      York for nearly a century and the penultimate architect of one of America’s
      legendary municipalities, New York City. One of the cruelest ironies unveiled in
      Caro’s magnum opus is the fact that Moses was never elected to public office but
      amassed for himself a position of exaggerated and untouchable authority, allowing
      him to utterly reshape the city of New York, leaving an indelible “footprint” in the
      city we know today. The paradox is that in the documentable public actions that
      Moses allegedly took for the “greater good” of the citizens of New York,
      concurrently, he used power and policy to dismantle communities of color and
      generally damage the lives of millions of people while remaining accountable to no
      one.

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    10. The Caro book has been well refuted, especially about the bridges myth. And by left-wing urban historians.

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    11. Meanwhile, here on Earth:
      https://www.history.com/news/interstate-highway-system-infrastructure-construction-segregation

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  8. FDIC chair Martin Greenberg will resign because of sexual harassment.

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  9. Somerby is not a progressive, neither is Nellie Bowles. Whether they use the word woke or not, progressives try not to be racist or sexist. Somerby does neither. In general, Progressives do not support book banning. And I don't know any progressive who would consistently promote Trump and right wing memes, the way Somerby does at this blog. Just today, he is promoting the right wing talking point that there is no crime in the hush money trial, that it is a partisan prosecution that Democrats cooked up because we cannot defeat Trump any other way.

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  10. Nellie Bowles is right there with Glen Greenwald, Dennis Miller, Bill Maher, Matt Taibi, and others still pretending to be part of the left after defecting to the right.

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    1. Not to mention Bari Weiss, who is, IIRC, either married to Bowles or, at least, they're an item. The Times treated Weiss badly. She was forced out for doing her job.

      Her job was to get more balance in the opinions. But, when she got an article by Senator Cotton, she was forced out because the libs at the Times didn't like the article

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    2. You're summarizing inaccurately.

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    3. She quit her job.

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    4. 8:01,
      Weiss wan't forced out of her job because she is anti-free speech, any more than you were for the same reason.

      Delete
  11. Somerby was so distracted by Stormy that he couldn't pay attention to the technical parts of the trial, like opening statements.

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  12. I've never heard Somerby say a word about climate change. That is supposedly a progressive issue but apparently not something he cares to write about.

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    Replies
    1. I agree that climate change is a progressive issue, but IMO both sides should agree. If CO2 emissions are going to destroy the planet, we should all support big steps to reduce these emissions. If CO2 isn't a big threat, then we should all oppose wasting large amounts of money to fight CO2 emissions.

      Of course almost none of us have the expertise to evaluate the risk. So, it's a matter of which experts we choose to believe.

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    2. I think it is a matter of supporting the presidential candidate who is willing to work on the issue, as opposed to the one who is so negligent that he made things worse while president before.

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    3. "If ...." LOL!

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    4. I believe you, David. As a retired actuary, you're smart enough to figure it out.

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    5. "it's a matter of which experts we choose to believe." Does anyone want to waste their time explaining why this is more of DIC's bullshit? I don't.

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    6. The overwhelming scientific consensus that CO2 is involved in climate change and is contributed by human activity can be ignored by rubes like DIC who intend to vote for the clown that has said it is a Chinese hoax. Science. To some it is a matter of opinion. There is absolutely no educating the Trump toadies.

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    7. unamused - I fully agree with your careful comment. But, many big questions remain, such as
      -- How much does CO2 contribute to temperature rise?
      -- What other climate affects are caused by CO2?
      -- How harmful and how beneficial are these changes?
      -- Will these changes continue at the same rate in the future?
      -- What, if anything, can we do to restrain CO2 growth?
      -- What will be cost be, in terms of money and in terms of not devoting resources to other problems?

      It's clear to me that the steps being taken are very insufficient to reduce the atmospheric content of CO2 or even to keep it from continuing to increase.

      I would add that your insult shows a lack of seriousness. It's like the issue of racism in a way. The insults "Climate denier" and "racist" are most useful as ways to attack the other party. Actually solving these problems is secondary.

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    8. DIC: The term climate denier is well applied to anyone who questions the role of fossil fuel CO2 production in global temperature changes. As you do. Your bullet points are mostly nonsense and not worthy of debate here. Questioning the very existence of human activity in climate change was the Republican mantra a few years ago, which of course benefited the kind of quid pro quo relationships conservative politicians have with the fossil fuel industry.Your bullet points exemplify the more evolved and nuanced version of climate denialism, that we need more data and maybe the transition out of fossil fuels is too costly, so let us sit on it some more. All the while DJ Trump solicits money from oil executives while spelling out his plan to gut environmental policy that affects their profits. This isn't even back room negotiation anymore. Your last remark about choosing your experts is glib and unserious. And part of a larger conservative/ Republican trend that is unscientific, involves a populist contempt for learned authority, and was likewise on display during the Covid epidemic, resulting in thousands of unnecessary deaths. Shameful.

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    9. @David 3:43 AM
      You're not supposed to be asking questions. You're supposed to run around like a headless chicken, screaming "the sky is falling! the sky is falling!".

      Until something else comes up, some other manufactured hysteria. Then you're supposed to forget about that one, and start screaming "the sky is falling! the sky is falling!" about the new one.

      That's the ticket.

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    10. Yeah, that's right, Trollboy, DiC is just asking questions. Bwahahaha!!!

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    11. I haven't see the Right this upset, since they counted black people's votes in the 2020 Presidential election.

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    12. Let's all come together in a show of bi-partisanship, and agree that there is absolutely nothing in the United States Constitution that allows the government to limit immigration.
      Then we can leave this phony border "crisis" and come together to solve the USA's real problems.

      Delete
  13. Here is Trump lying about his teleprompter glitch (from Digby):

    https://digbysblog.net/2024/05/20/donald-trump-doesnt-freeze/

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  14. Truth Social (aka Trump Media & Technology Group Corp) lost $328 million in the first quarter of 2024
    Total revenue was $770,500 with a market cap of $6 billion.
    No wonder private citizen Donald Trump is complaining about the economy.

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  15. "One part of America "reacted to Trump"—but another large part of America largely reacted to us!"

    Conservatives pushed back against some aspects of well-meaning progressive movements around the time. In some cases, a case can be made that there was overreach that gave them leeway to make reasonable and accurate criticisms of them (and to use it politically.)

    Eg. white fragility, neologisms like LatinX, defunding the police, overuse of accusations of racism and stocking high school boy's bathrooms with menstrual products to insert into their vaginas.

    "Trump may be on the comeback road. How much of that tracks back to us?"

    Some say none at all. Somerby seems to think a large part. None of the comments here except one (3:26 PM) even address it.

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  16. Somerby might say that’s because the commenters here are *people* people. The die is cast, and the only task now is to discuss the anthropology.

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  17. Don't forget about the the.

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  18. This reminds me of when Tucker Carlson and Sean Hannity jumped the line to get their COVID vaccines before those who were much more vulnerable to the virus.

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